Los Angeles Times

Fresh uncertaint­ies at nuclear summit

Obama touts his nonprolife­ration achievemen­ts at the internatio­nal meeting, but Russia remains absent, and terrorism is a worry.

- By Michael A. Memoli and Tracy Wilkinson

WASHINGTON — President Obama convened more than 50 world leaders in Washington this week hoping that internatio­nal progress on one of his long- standing policy priorities, nonprolife­ration, would outlast his administra­tion, but the gathering served mostly to highlight the mixed record of Obama’s nuclear agenda.

At the fourth and final in a series of nuclear security summits started by his administra­tion, Obama touted successes including a reduction in global nuclear stockpiles and the landmark nuclear deal between Iran and six nations. Yet the absence of nuclear superpower Russia from the summit was notable, and Obama and other leaders debated at length how to keep nuclear materials from terrorists, a vexing question that has dogged world leaders since well before Sept. 11.

The president argued that collective action by the internatio­nal community has helped stymie extremists’ pursuit of nuclear materials.

“Over the past six years, when it comes to nuclear security, we’ve embraced a new type of thinking – and a new type of action,” he said Friday. “This is a perfect example of a 21st century security challenge that no one nation can solve alone.”

For the first time, the assembled world leaders were to participat­e in a simulation exercise at the summit to test how they might respond to a potential nuclear terrorist threat. The possibilit­y that people associated with Islamic State were surveillin­g an official at a Belgian nuclear facility raised alarm after last week’s bombings in Brussels about the terrorist network’s goals. Obama reiterated Friday, though, that no terrorist group has obtained a nuclear weapon.

But counter- terrorism was not the primary goal of the summit process Obama launched in 2009. Rather, he sought to gain commitment­s from countries to reduce or eliminate altogether stockpiles of weapons- usable nuclear materials, or build new safeguards against theft. And experts say significan­t progress has been made toward those goals.

The White House also praised the creation of centers in several countries that train nuclear profession­als at internatio­nal standards and noted that 2005 amendments to an internatio­nal agreement on protecting nuclear material are on track to come into force after ratificati­on in additional nations.

An analysis by the Nuclear Threat Initiative noted that 24 countries have such supplies of highly enriched uranium or separated plutonium that could be used in nuclear weapons, down from 35 at the start of Obama’s administra­tion. But six nations are actually increasing their supplies, including isolated North Korea as well as Pakistan. In addition, deteriorat­ing U. S.- Russia relations have resulted in lapses in cooperatio­n on reducing nuclear materials.

The decision of Russian President Vladimir Putin not to attend the summit raised concerns among nuclear- energy experts. Russia possesses half the world’s nuclear weapons and half the world’s nuclear- use materials. It was also the destinatio­n for the enriched uranium that Iran agreed to get rid of as part of its landmark nuclear deal last year.

Putin’s absence “creates a big hole,” said William H. Tobey, senior fellow at Harvard University’s Belfer Center for Science and Internatio­nal Affairs.

He outlined several worrisome problems with Russia’s nuclear- security program, including two recent 10% cuts in the Russian federal budget, aging equipment and endemic corruption and organized crime.

The Russian nuclear regulatory agency recently responded to budget cuts by keeping personnel but cutting travel, meaning inspectors cannot go to the plants they should be inspecting, he said.

“Maintenanc­e has not been a hallmark of Russian management,” Tobey said.

Another growing concern, he said, is the rise in Islamic fundamenta­lism in parts of Russia, including the Caucasus region and, more recently, the Urals, which is also home to some of the country’s most sensitive nuclear installati­ons.

Obama administra­tion officials insisted that good progress has been made in potential “hot spots” where nuclear material could potentiall­y represent a threat, including India and Pakistan.

“We won’t stop worry about this and 100 other things in the nuclear world … but there has been progress,” said Thomas Countryman, assistant secretary of State for internatio­nal security and nonprolife­ration.

Obama deserves credit for elevating the issue of nuclear security, which itself produced tangible accom- plishments, said Joseph Cirincione, president of the Ploughshar­es Fund, a nonprolife­ration advocacy group. Ukraine’s removal of all of its highly enriched uranium years before its current instabilit­y is “the poster child for the success of this effort.”

But it has also faltered in the face of what he called the “three Rs” — Russia, Republican­s who’ve stood in the way of efforts like the Iran deal, and resistance even within the Obama administra­tion to fully implementi­ng the president’s goals, particular­ly at the Penta- gon.

“He had a very ambitious agenda,” Cirincione said. “The vision was correct. His analysis of the danger was correct. It was just much harder than he thought it was going to be.”

One of the biggest questions coming out of the summit is whether the enterprise Obama helped establish will outlive his administra­tion, and not only because the Republican front- runner to succeed him, Donald Trump, suggested this week that some U. S. allies might consider attaining nuclear weapons of their own, a view that White House aides slammed as a potentiall­y “catastroph­ic” change in U. S. position.

Bonnie Jenkins, a coordinato­r for the Obama administra­tion’s threat reduction programs, said it was possible that the next president, along with other countries, might continue the nuclear-security process. “The lingo we are using is that this is the last summit in its current format,” she said.

Obama ‘ had a very ambitious agenda. The vision was correct. ... It was just much harder than he thought it was going to be.’

— Joseph Cirincione,

Ploughshar­es Fund

michael. memoli @ latimes. com tracy. wilkinson @ latimes. com

 ?? Mandel Ngan
AFP/ Getty I mages ?? PRESIDENT OBAMA speaks at the fourth and f inal in a series of nuclear summits started by his administra­tion, attended by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and more than 50 other world leaders.
Mandel Ngan AFP/ Getty I mages PRESIDENT OBAMA speaks at the fourth and f inal in a series of nuclear summits started by his administra­tion, attended by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and more than 50 other world leaders.

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